Chart Of The Day: The GBP Is A Buy (Despite The Bleak UK Economy)

 | Dec 14, 2017 10:02AM ET

by Pinchas Cohen

The dollar is recuperating from yesterday’s drop, which was the hardest in three weeks. The Aussie dollar and British pound are the only two majors currently gaining strength against the dollar. The AUD is 0.35 percent higher and the GBP is 0.30 higher for the day.

The Australian dollar is showing signs of bottoming after a near 8 percent fall since September as it finds support on a long-term uptrend line since January 2016, so we'll focus on the pound after the Bank of England's policy meeting.

h3 Why the BoE Will Remain In A Holding Period/h3

While there is absolutely no expectation of a rate hike, the market is paying attention to comments on the pricing of two or more increases over the next three years. Though comments indicated that hikes will come gradually, it's more likely the BoE is in a holding period.

Policy officials are hoping to persuade markets that there are more increases in the pipeline. This has been their strategy to contain weakness in sterling. The weakness is the predominant reason for the overshoot of inflation last year. This constituted the bulk of the inflation margin over the 2 percent target of the November print of the 3.1 percent – the fastest pace of price growth in nearly six years – and a level which would require the governor to explain why the BoE is not doing more, if anything, to contain inflation.

Then again, it’s questionable whether the Bank can deliver more rate hikes. Although inflation might have peaked, it’s not likely to go down very rapidly. Yesterday's unemployment rate was reported at 4.3 percent, which is the lowest level in over four decades, yet wages fell by 0.4 percent, which is the eighth consecutive fall.

Meanwhile, unemployment is beginning to show cracks, as the number of people who are employed has declined for the second time in a row, this time by 56,000. Despite all the pessimism this signals, the pound is on the rise for unknown reasons. So let's not look a gift horse in the mouth. Should demand overcome supply, we would bet our money on another pound rally.